Course EL7001: June 17 - Aug 11, 2013, Final Grade: A- (92/100)
In this course, students are introduced to the essential elements in the field of e-learning. Students will develop an understanding of the principles, philosophies, best practices, approaches, technologies, and delivery models used by practitioners in the field of e-learning. The various needs e-learning practices can meet and the best ways to effectively implement e-learning into academic environments will also be explored.
Course Reflection: 92% final score
This course was very challenging not because of the content but because of my mentor's expectations went above and beyond the syllabus. It was very difficult to provide him with the additional expectations because most assignment expectations asked for something completely different. However, having said all that it's important to note that the mentor in this course was extremely helpful in raising my scientific awareness and helped me to narrow my theoretical lens to a more scholarly approach rather than one of practitioner. Assignment #1 - An Overview of e-Learning - 91/100
Good analysis of this, Michael. Good use of current resources. Your writing is becoming more parsimonious, keep working at it.
Once again, the mark of Western scholarship is the use of theoretical frameworks to understand issues and topics and continually test those theories with systematic empirical approaches. As you are preparing to participate in this system, you must always look for the theory, look for the research about the theory and look for the gaps in the research.
Principles and Practices in E-Learning
Course EL7001: June 17 - Aug 11, 2013, Final Grade: A- (92/100)
In this course, students are introduced to the essential elements in the field of e-learning. Students will develop an understanding of the principles, philosophies, best practices, approaches, technologies, and delivery models used by practitioners in the field of e-learning. The various needs e-learning practices can meet and the best ways to effectively implement e-learning into academic environments will also be explored.Course Reflection: 92% final score
This course was very challenging not because of the content but because of my mentor's expectations went above and beyond the syllabus. It was very difficult to provide him with the additional expectations because most assignment expectations asked for something completely different. However, having said all that it's important to note that the mentor in this course was extremely helpful in raising my scientific awareness and helped me to narrow my theoretical lens to a more scholarly approach rather than one of practitioner.Assignment #1 - An Overview of e-Learning - 91/100
Assignment #2 - e-Learning Technology Presentation & Reflective Paper - 93/100
Assignment #3 - e-Learning Models - 93/100
Assignment #4 - Digital Divide - 92/100
Good analysis of this, Michael. Good use of current resources. Your writing is becoming more parsimonious, keep working at it.
Once again, the mark of Western scholarship is the use of theoretical frameworks to understand issues and topics and continually test those theories with systematic empirical approaches. As you are preparing to participate in this system, you must always look for the theory, look for the research about the theory and look for the gaps in the research.
Dr. G
Assignment #5 - Meaningful Learning Experiences - 94/100
Good scholarly work, Michael!
Dr. G
Assignment #6 - e-Learning Research and Assessment - 95/100
https://sites.google.com/site/michaelhigleyeportfolio/home
Assignment #7 - Research and Practice in e-Learning - 92/100
Assignment #8 - Organizational Assessment: e-Learning - 90/100